Heavy rain and high winds swept through the Daytona Beach area early Monday night, flipping over a Cessna airplane that had just landed at Daytona Beach International Airport and knocking a tree onto on a home, officials said.

Heavy rain and high winds swept through the Daytona Beach area early Monday night, flipping over a Cessna airplane that had just landed at Daytona Beach International Airport and knocking a tree onto on a home, officials said.

No injuries were reported.

Amanda Bowen, a meteorologist with the National Weather Service office in Melbourne, said high winds and blanketed the Daytona Beach area at 6:30 p.m. At that time, a Cessna plane with two people on board was taxiing on the runway at the Daytona Beach International Airport, and the strong winds flipped it over, Bowen said.

“Two people were on board, but they were not harmed,” Bowen said.

Bowen said the rough weather then moved off to the coast and Daytona Beach.

The forecast for today calls for clouds, rain and wind, she said. A 70 percent chance of rain will likely bring showers and possibly a thunderstorm before 2 p.m. A south wind will be blowing at 10 to 20 mph, becoming west in the afternoon, and could bring gusts as high as 30 mph.

On Monday night, the Cessna plane had just landed and was taxiing along the runway when it was overturned by the high winds, said Bill Snyder, a division chief with Volusia County Fire Services.

“As far as I understand there is no real damage to the runway,” Snyder said.

The people on board the single engine airplane were two student pilots who were uninjured but the plane, owned by Phoenix East Aviation, sustained substantial damage, said Volusia County spokeswoman Joanne Magley.

Traffic control at the airport sent out an alert at 6:30 p.m. about a microburst at the airport with winds up to 75 mph, Magley said.

There was no fuel spill or fire as a result of the plane overturning but John Murray, the airport’s director of safety, said some debris was scattered around the airport.

The airport remained open and did not close during the weather incident, Magley said.

Volusia County sheriff’s spokesman Brandon Haught said the Cessna plane sustained a rip in the right wing.

Haught said the bad weather also knocked a tree into power lines near a hotel on West International Speedway Boulevard, brought down power lines in a yard in the 2500 block of Bellevue Avenue, and knocked a tree down that blocked most of the lanes in the 1000 block of Orange Avenue. There were also reports of traffic lights not working at Jimmy Ann Drive and Dunn Avenue, Haught said.

Daytona Beach firefighters responded to several calls for service where trees damaged structures, said spokesman Lt. Larry R. Stoney. There were reports of power outages on the southeast side of the city in the areas of Nova Road and Orange Avenue, he said. Florida Power & Light was notified and started working on restoring power to the area. The most severe call was about a tree that fell onto a home in the 800 block of North Kottle Circle.

The owner of that home, Florence Johnson, was not injured. Johnson said she was in her home and heard the noise but did not know what happened.

“I only saw the tree when a neighbor from across the street came to check on me,” Johnson said.

The longtime resident of Daytona Beach said it is the first time something like this has happened to her.

“I have been living here 50 years, 51 in May,” Johnson said. “I am blessed ... and this is first time the devil had to come by and put that tree on my house.”